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"Pen Island" Words

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December 30, 2008, 19:34
wordcrafter
"Pen Island" Words
A company-website URL is often simply the company name, but without spaces, capitalization or special characters. Thus "Barnes & Noble" becomes barnesandnoble.com, for example.

The apocryphal tale is told of the website of a specialty retailer that sold ink-pens in hundreds of types and styles. It used the company name, Pen Island. It failed to anticipate that the URL penisland.com can have an unfortunate misreading if one splits the words after the first five letters, rather than after the first three!

This week we'll present what might be called "Pen Island" words: words that could be misunderstood if split incorrectly. For example, beestings does not mean "the stingers of certain honey-making insects".

beestings – the first "milk" produced by a mammal (esp. a cow or, sometimes, a goat) after giving birth.
Also called colostrum. It is particularly rich in antibodies and minerals.
December 30, 2008, 19:51
Kalleh
Hey, Wordcrafter, that's a great coinage. Perhaps it will be the 2009 word of the year next year! Wink
December 31, 2008, 02:42
arnie
quote:
The apocryphal tale is told of the website of a specialty retailer that sold ink-pens in hundreds of types and styles.

It's not apocryphal; the web site exists. However, it is at http://www.penisland.net - not .com.


Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
December 31, 2008, 03:33
BobHale
Maybe not apocryphal but possibly what snopes calls "multiple truth values". The site, as we've discussed before, exists but is it a real company? Navigating around it leads only to dead ends or to adverts for other pen suppliers, which doesn't seem to be much of a business strategy.

My suspicion is that the creators of the site knew exactly what they were doing and are not a real company in any sense other than accepting advertising from others.


"No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson.
January 01, 2009, 18:10
wordcrafter
Men and women have different ways of speaking. But today's word does not mean "male diction", the way men talk.

malediction – a curse (in the sense of an evil spell, not just a "curse word);
. . .also, the act of calling down a curse upon

Come to think of it, some might say that indeed this is "male diction"!
January 02, 2009, 18:25
Kalleh
I love this theme.

Just today our son said that at his work someone asked what shit-take mushrooms were. It couldn't have been more perfect for this theme! Wink
January 02, 2009, 21:30
wordcrafter
Today's word is not "a secure cover for a cooking utensil".

potlatch – an opulent ceremonial feast at which possessions are given away or destroyed to display wealth or enhance prestige
(orig. among certain Native American tribes of the Pacific Northwest; also in fig. and ext. use)
January 03, 2009, 01:06
neveu
These kinds of words were a running joke on the Saturday Night Live Celebrity Jeopardy parodies: the pen is mightier; therapists; an album cover ...
January 03, 2009, 17:42
wordcrafter
sidereal1. relating to the stars (or constellations)
2. of time periods: determined or measured by means of the stars: sidereal day; sidereal year;
. . .of the movement of a planet or moon: relative to the stars

We illustrate each usage.
January 04, 2009, 15:31
<Asa Lovejoy>
quote:
Originally posted by wordcrafter:
Today's word is not "a secure cover for a cooking utensil".

potlatch – an opulent ceremonial feast ...among certain Native American tribes of the Pacific Northwest

If the potlatch takes place in Western British Columbia the host may have them spend the night on Haida beds. http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/cultural/northamerica/haida.html
January 04, 2009, 15:37
jerry thomas
Does the potlatch give access to the stash?
January 04, 2009, 18:36
wordcrafter
The dogfood that the dog ate has nothing to do with "dogate".

dogate – the office of a doge
. . .doge (long ō) – the tit/e of the chief magistrate in old Venice and Genoa; loosely, any chief magistrate or leader

In the movie The Court Jester, Danny Kaye plays the lead role of Hubert Hawkins, a hapless carnival performer who masquerades as the king's newly-hired jester. When Hawkins (black type) first meets the king (red), this nonsense ensues:

This message has been edited. Last edited by: wordcrafter,
January 07, 2009, 18:25
wordcrafter
potsherd – a piece of broken pottery
Bonus word:
spat
– see quote